A recent article by David Gordon [1] discussing What We Owe the Future by William MacAskill on utilitarian ethics got me thinking about the absurdity of cardinal utility theory. Even from a layman’s perspective, the strangeness of cardinal utility seems like a good reason to believe there is something seriously wrong with its premises. It leads to ideas such as a dictator made so happy by enslaving others that he outweighs all negatives, as well as other bizarre conclusions, including the “sadistic conclusion [2],” and the “repugnant conclusion [3],” which both involve optimizing utility in groups. However, academics persist at papering over these conclusions and justifying all kinds of horrifying policies. This suggests some kind of perverse desire that I don’t fully understand. I suppose the title “Professor of Ethical Philosophy” is more attractive than “Professor of Genocide Planning,” but aside from that I don’t see the appeal.
Tag: liberty
It’s just a little article on the history of money, but I managed to get something published on the Mises Wire!
The article is “The Rise and Fall of Good Money: A Tale of the Market and the State.”
It was originally a part of a longer essay I wrote that had to be split up to fit into the Mises Wire length requirements. I’ll put up the other two parts in separate posts:
What Makes Good Money? A Misesian Perspective
This piece goes through the first half of Mises’s Theory of Money and Credit and pulls out the qualities Mises thought were necessary for things to serve well as money.
Why Cryptocurrency Is (Still) Interesting
This one looks at cryptocurrency from the same Misesian standards and evaluates it as a potential money. Then it discusses the upcoming shift that state monetary systems are making towards Central Bank Digital Currencies and evaluates that as well.
Cryptocurrency is a contentious topic even among die-hard anarchists. Fans of gold argue that a return to the gold standard is key. Others argue that crypto has no commodity value and is therefore worthless. Crypto enthusiasts argue about which particular coin or coins are best, and even adherents to a single coin’s philosophy disagree about how its transactions should be handled.
The Libertarian Party has changed. In 2022, the Mises Caucus, a more hardcore libertarian group embracing anarchists and anarcho-capitalists as well as traditional minarchist libertarians, took over most of the Libertarian National Committee, as well as a majority of state parties.
Gun control seems to be a permanent fixture of the American authoritarian left. Despite some significant gains on the side of freedom in the last fifteen years, the forces that want to disarm and subjugate peaceful Americans have not given up. On the contrary, they have redoubled their attack on our rights from different directions, so that today we face increasingly hostile and tyrannical state action against any sort of dissidence. We must be prepared to oppose these forces every step of the way, therefore the topics of civilian arms, self-defense, and self-reliance are more important than ever. Historical perspective is valuable, but accurate evaluation of the current landscape and clear and realistic recommendations are absolutely vital.
Oh, Yeah, Canada!
The Freedom Convoy is now in Ottawa, and has been there over a week! In protest of covid vaccine mandates, it looks like around 50,000 trucks formed a convoy and now they’re making the would-be tyrants in the Canadian government look as bad and as impotent as they really are.
There are lots of things going on, and I wanted to touch on a few of the ones I thought were most interesting, but there’s also a point about the idiotic injunction on honking that I don’t think anyone has brought up yet… watch to find out!
Civil disobedience is one of the most important weapons we have in the fight for freedom.
Three Cheers for Self Defense
Self-defense is one of the most important rights we have, a corollary of the right to life.
Here’s a short video that stems from the Kyle Rittenhouse case and explores some of the principles behind the right to self-defense, including application to the state, and the tools to self-defense.
I’m frankly surprised that this is becoming a viable topic. Secession is a hugely important part of liberty–it’s the ability of a person or a group to separate itself from a government that is not serving its purpose.
Yet at the same time, we need to be aware of inertia as a political force. If secession occurs in the U.S., we can expect that change to encourage some of the worst in government to seize as much power as possible.
Therefore, we need to support secession consistently (meaning even after a hypothetical U.S. national divorce) and work to avoid rapid polarization.
Anyway, this video is a short discussion on that topic.